education

A Century of Advocacy

A Century of Advocacy Over the past century, early childhood advocates have addressed poverty, child labor, access to high-quality affordable day care, health, and nutritionall issues that affect children. Currently early childhood professionals and organizations are working to promote many issues that directly relate to or impact early childhood curriculum, including Federal, state, and local […]

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Developmental vs. Academic Curriculum Organization

Developmental vs. Academic Curriculum Organization Every curriculum articulates what children should learn from both theoretical and organizational perspectives. In early childhood, two different approaches predominate. In some curricula, goals, concepts and activities are designed and organized in terms of academic content areas such as math, science, social studies, reading, and writing. In other curricula, these

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What Is DAP?

What Is DAP? More From the Field In this clip Diana McGawley, an intervention specialist, emphasizes the importance of a developmental perspective. Critical Thinking Question Why should teachers be concerned about “pushing” children academically? DAP is not a curriculum but a framework for how to think about curriculum in a way that takes into account

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The Big Picture: Developmentally Appropriate Practice

The Big Picture: Developmentally Appropriate Practice In this section, we consider the relative position of early childhood curriculum within the larger framework of developmentally appropriate practice (DAP). The early childhood period from birth to 8 years of age is unique in life-span development in terms of growth and learning. Curriculum for young children reflects and

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Transmissional, Transactional, and Transformational Views of Education

Transmissional, Transactional, and Transformational Views of Education In short, the transmissional view is traditional, in that students are expected to master information delivered by the teacher. This reflects a teaching method that was standard around the world until the twentieth century. The transactional perspective is more egalitarian, and people with a transformational orientation believe that

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How Has Thinking about Curriculum Changed over Time?

How Has Thinking about Curriculum Changed over Time? The theories and ideas of the individuals profiled above, as well as those of others, continue to affect our thinking about early childhood curriculum. Other factors that influence curriculum development today include society’s values, standards, accountability systems, research findings, community expectations, culture and language, and individual children’s

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Gardners Theory of Multiple Intelligences

Table 1.1: Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences Dimension of Intelligence Example of Profession Interpersonal Counselor Politician Salesperson Intrapersonal Researcher Novelist Entrepreneur Bodily/Kinesthetic Athlete Firefighter Actor Musical/Rhythmic Musician Composer Disk Jockey Verbal/Linguistic Journalist Teacher Lawyer Logical/Mathematical Engineer Programmer Accountant Naturalist Environmentalist Farmer Botanist Visual/Spatial Navigator Sculptor Architect Existential Philosopher Theorist Gardner’s theory of multiple intelligences (MI)

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Jean Piaget

Jean Piaget A contemporary of both Montessori and Dewey, Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget (18961980) proposed a theory of cognitive development that initiated a constructivist view of curriculum. Piaget’s experiments with young children (some of them conducted at a modified Montessori school in Geneva, Switzerland) revealed them, during their play, to be active participants in the

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